Preserve Calavera
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Mount Calavera
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Welcome to Preserve Calavera

Preserve Calavera's mission is to protect, enhance and restore the natural resources of coastal North San Diego County as habitat for native plants and animals; to promote the use of these areas by a responsible public; to support education and restoration programs; to minimize the adverse effect of development; and to use any lawful means to carry out these objectives.


2008 National Wetlands Award

Diane Nygaard was selected for the 2008 Wetlands Award in the category of Wetland Community Leader. This annual program of the Environmental Law Institute awards 6 individuals who exemplify excellence and innovation in wetlands protection, restoration and education. The program is co-sponsored by the Environmental Law Institute, Army Corps of Engineers, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, U S Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine Fisheries Service. The awards ceremony will be May 13 in Washington DC. (For more information on the awards program visit www.nationalwetlandsawards.org).

Over the past decade, Diane has worked tirelessly to raise the awareness of local leaders and the community-at-large about the importance of, and threats to, our local wetlands. Under her leadership, Preserve Calavera has become the largest conservation group in north San Diego County. She has exemplified how members of the public can participate in wetland protection and restoration by: providing informed written and oral comments that have led to avoidance and minimization of wetland impacts from development; helping secure key acquisitions; organizing community wetland restoration projects; collecting stream characterization data; writing stream buffer guidelines; and training volunteers to monitor frog populations. She has led scores of hikes, organized Oak tree plantings, led creek clean-ups and invasive plant removals, gathered and cooked edible non-native plants for our ‘Eat the Invasives’ picnics and manned tables at countless community events so the local residents would have the opportunity to learn about the importance of wetlands protection. Diane has helped stem the tide of historic wetland loss in San Diego County.

We are extremely proud of our intrepid leader and feel she is so very deserving of this prestigious recognition! Diane believes this is a shared-honor……. "Of course, all of you and the thousands of other community activists working to protect wetlands are all deserving of such recognition. I can only accept it as a symbol of all of our work."


Buena Vista Creek Valley

We were successful in securing half of this remarkable little valley with the purchase of the 134-acre Buena Vista Creek Ecological Reserve but what about the other half? The 180-acre Quarry site stands between the El Salto Falls and the Reserve. What do you want to see there? Dense housing and more retail stores or a continuation of the natural creek flowing towards the Lagoon. The Luiseno people have revered this valley for thousands of years. Prehistoric hearths and shell middens attest to the abundance they found here. The historic Marron Adobe reminds us of the not so distant past, when early settlers found the valley a perfect spot to raise their families. Today, it is still a spectacular place, with a rich diversity of plants and animals. Some rare, like the Willow Flycatcher, Bell’s Vireo and Orange-throated Whiptail and some we are more familiar with, like the Gray Fox, Coyote and Cottontails. It is also a regional wildlife movement corridor. It is unique with its’ cultural, historical and biological resources. Keeping the entire valley intact and protected will be a wonderful legacy for ourselves and future generations. Click here to view our Vision for the Buena Vista Creek Valley.


Sherman Property Acquisition

Its official- the Sherman property (named for the landowner who sold this area for preservation) is now the Buena Vista Creek Ecological Reserve.  Mark Read prepared a new video about this area- using the great program done by KOCT. Click on this link to view the video (requires Apple Quicktime).


Action Alert

SANDAG has completed their series of public workshops on the proposed "smart growth" plan- their way to add 100,000 more homes above what current General Plans/Zoning would allow. Everyone should look at what is proposed at www.sandag.org/rcp and let SANDAG- and your city know what you think. But please, if you do nothing else, send an e-mail asking them to remove the Quarry Creek site from the list. This would create a "town center" in the Buena Vista creek valley- site of the sacred El Salto waterfall, irreplaceable historic and cultural resources, and the regional wildlife corridor. This valley is the top priority concern for acquisition of open space by the federal and state wildlife agencies. It also has tremendous impacts on the downstream Buena Vista lagoon and our coast. This is an area that should have little or no development- and not one that should be targeted for density increases. There is nothing "smart" about destroying this valley.

Send comments to the Planning Director Don Neu at Dneu@ci.carlsbad.ca.us, the Mayor and city council at council@ci.carlsbad.ca.us, and the SANDAG project manager Bob Leitner at rcp@sandag.org .


Robertson Ranch

Through our efforts over the last few months a number of significant improvements have been made to the Robertson Ranch Project. These changes will go a long way to preserving and protecting the Calavera area open space- and have set some important precedents that we hope get incorporated into every project. We have therefore entered an agreement with the developers of this project and have withdrawn all further opposition to this project. Key project improvements include:

  • Biological resources - management of the open space area, wetland buffers along Calavera Creek, project monitoring by a qualified biologist, improvements to project re-vegetation, protection of the wildlife corridor throughout the time period of construction, removal of paved trail head parking lot until this can be integrated with a comprehensive trail plan for this area, better protection of wildlife crossings of roadways, the use of coyote roller bars on backyard fences that are adjacent to the open space, restrictions on lighting and noise, restrictions on use of invasive/pest plants, provision of dog waste dispensers, and the best HOA CC & R's to protect open space from the effects of adjacent development that we have found anywhere.
  • Hydrology - funds to help address cumulative impacts on the Agua Hedionda watershed.
  • Air quality - carpool/vanpool preferential parking, construction of transit facilities, shade trees in parking lots and residential areas, energy efficient lighting and windows, zero emission VOC paints.

What's New

 

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E-mail Preserve Calavera at info@preservecalavera.org